| Group Plans to Sue EPA Over Sewage Sludge on Farms
US: September 15, 2008
WASHINGTON - The Center for Food Safety, a private advocacy group, said
Thursday it plans to sue the US Environmental Protection Agency over its
refusal to put a moratorium on dumping sewage sludge on farmland.
The use of sludge, the byproduct of waste water treatment, on farmland is
legal under EPA regulations. Six dozen food and consumer groups want to halt
the practice.
The groups petitioned the EPA in October 2003 to stop sewage sludge disposal
on farms. The EPA denied the petition for a moratorium.
EPA spokeswoman Enesta Jones said the agency "does not comment on lawsuits
we have not seen or have not been filed."
Sewage sludge can contain nutrients and organic matter, which some say make
it a useful fertilizer. Proponents view its disposal on farms as a cheap
source of fertilizer that keeps wastes from piling up in landfills or being
dumped in the ocean.
Research shows sludge also contains a harmful mix of heavy metals, pathogens
and toxic chemicals that have killed farm animals, devastated crop yields
and inflicted serious illness and health disorders on people who live and
work near dump sites, Center for Food Safety Executive Director Andrew
Kimbrell said.
"We're pretty sure the court will declare that EPA acted illegally in
denying our petition," Kimbrell said.
The EPA determined there was not enough scientific evidence to support
claims of harm to farm animals, crops and people in its decision to reject
the petition.
Since then, the data used to make this conclusion has come under question.
In a lawsuit filed by Georgia farmer Andy McElmurray, US District Court
Judge Anthony Alaimo found that "senior EPA officials took extraordinary
steps to quash scientific dissent and any questioning of EPA's biosolids
program."
The judge ruled in February that McElmurray was entitled to Agriculture
Department "prevented planting" subsidies because of contamination of his
farm by sewage sludge. Alaimo called data used to support EPA's Part 503(b)
sludge regulations "fudged," "fabricated" and "fraudulent."
Kimbrell said, "Now we have a judicial decision behind us so we can go,
fairly confident, to the court and say this denial was based on bad
science."
"You rarely have a court decision bolstering your position," he added. "We
look forward to a positive ruling on our petition, which calls for a full
moratorium on this until they've done a full assessment of the food safety,
human health, and environmental impacts."
(Editing by David Gregorio)
Story by Jasmin Melvin
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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